Post on 27-Jan-2021
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Direttore Responsabile
Simone Borile, Direttore Generale della Scuola Superiore per Mediatori Linguistici CIELS e
Professore di Antropologia della violenza e dell’Aggressività e di Antropologia sociale, presso lo
stesso Istituto.
Comitato Scientifico
Ivano Spano, Professore Ordinario di Sociologia Generale e dell’Educazione presso l’Università di
Padova.
Alessandro Mariani, Professore Ordinario di Pedagogia Generale e Sociale nell'Università degli Studi
di Firenze, presso la Facoltà di Scienze della Formazione.
Maurizio Mistri, Professore Associato in Economia Internazionale presso l’Università di Padova e
studioso senior di Economia Internazionale.
Vittorio Alberto Torbianelli, Professore Associato nel settore scientifico disciplinare dell’Economia
Applicata presso il Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche Aziendali Matematiche e Statistiche
dell’Università degli Studi di Trieste.
Gianluigi Cecchini, Professore Associato di Diritto Internazionale, presso l’Università di Trieste.
José Manuel De Morais Anes, Member of two University Research Centers, the CEDIS (in Security
and Law) of the Faculty of Law of the New University and CLIPSIS (Security and International
Relations) of the Universidade Lusíada de Lisboa.
Slobodan I. Marković, Phd Ful professor Faculty of Law and Business Dr Lazar Vrkatic in NoviSad,
University Belgrade.
Fabio Quassoli, Professore Associato presso il Dipartimento di Sociologia e Ricerca Sociale
dell’Università di Milano-Bicocca.
Cesare La Mantia, Professore Associato per il settore scientifico disciplinare M-STO/03 Storia
dell’Europa Orientale presso la facoltà di Scienze Politiche dell’Università di Trieste.
José Francisco Medina Montero, Professore Associato per il settore scientifico-disciplinare L-
LIN/07 Lingua e Traduzione – Lingua Spagnola presso il Dipartimento di Scienze Giuridiche, del
Linguaggio, dell’Interpretazione e della Traduzione (IUSLIT), Sezione di Studi in Lingue Moderne
per Interpreti e Traduttori (SSLMIT), dell’Università degli Studi di Trieste.
Desirée Pangerc, Antropologa applicata, membro del Royal Anthropological Institute.
Dan Podjed, Phd in Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, University of Ljubljana.
Lucia Regolin, Professore Associato confermato presso il Dipartimento di Psicologia Generale
dell’Università di Padova.
Comitato di Redazione
Abbondanza Angelicchio, Roberta Dassie, Veronica Piovan.
Segreteria di Redazione
Daniela Berto, Monica Bettella.
e-mail: rivistaitalianadiantropologia@ciels.it
Grafic Designer
Luca Pastorino
Web master
Kleber Alessandro De Oliveira Moreira
mailto:rivistaitalianadiantropologia@ciels.it
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Direzione e Redazione
Campus Ciels
Via S. Venier, 200
35127 Padova
rivistaitalianadiantropologia@ciels.it
Presentazione dei contributi e referaggio
Gli articoli da sottoporre alla Rivista vanno spediti in formato Word alla sede della redazione previa
valutazione della Direzione circa l’attinenza del tema trattato con quelli oggetto della Rivista; ciascun
lavoro sarà sottoposto in forma assolutamente anonima a referees che decideranno sulla
pubblicazione senza modifiche, con modifiche ovvero sulla non pubblicazione.
Anno VI, Edizione Numero 1 – Giugno 2020
09 Giugno 2020 – Padova
Registrazione al Tribunale di Padova n. 2394 del 21/10/2015.
ISSN: 2499-1848
Tutti i diritti riservati.
È consentita la riproduzione esclusivamente a fini didattici e non commerciali, a condizione che venga
citata la fonte.
La rivista è fruibile dal sito www.rivistadiantropologia.it
mailto:rivistaitalianadiantropologia@ciels.itfile://///SRVCIELS/../Ciels/Desktop/RIVISTA%20ITALIANA%20DI%20ANTROPOLOGIA%20APPLICATA%20(Roberta)/2016/Numero%201%20-%20Giugno%202016/www.rivistadiantropologia.it
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LA RIVISTA
L’idea e l’esigenza di creare la “Rivista Italiana di Antropologia Applicata – Analisi dei Processi
Socioculturali nella società contemporanea”, nasce dalla necessità di rendere di facile fruizione e di
ampia diffusione, i risultati delle ricerche e degli studi in ambito socio-culturale. Gli studi e le ricerche
non saranno però le sole pubblicazioni presenti nella Rivista; infatti, la stessa, è pensata per essere
luogo di incontro e di confronto per tutti gli studiosi del settore. Si auspica che tale confronto socio-
antropologico, calato in una prospettiva multidisciplinare e multifattoriale, che consente di elaborare
approcci di analisi dei contesti culturali, possa essere foriero di nuove iniziative di ricerca e di studio.
Le riflessioni con i diversi specialisti del settore consentono di avanzare proposte di studio e
conseguimento di risultati attraverso l’esperienza vissuta e l’interpretazionismo dell’inevitabile
cambiamento della società e del rapporto che l’uomo crea, attraverso i suoi legami sociali con essa.
Il progetto scientifico si propone quindi di convergere su obiettivi strategici attraverso l’acquisizione
di modelli interpretativi applicati alle realtà, ai singoli contesti, all’uomo nelle sue più totali
manifestazioni sociali e culturali.
La cadenza delle uscite è semestrale, con “Numeri Speciali” pensati per divulgare i risultati raggiunti
al termine dei vari progetti in atto, o in caso di particolari contingenze.
È presente, inoltre, una “Rubrica Aperta” volta ad accogliere liberi contributi di particolare rilevanza
scientifica.
Il Direttore Responsabile
Prof. Simone Borile
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L’EDITORIALE
Questo è il primo numero dell’Anno VI della Rivista Italiana di Antropologia Applicata dedicato a
“Modificazioni corporee”. Si tratta dell’edizione semestrale, contenente articoli su differenti temi.
Gli autori di questo numero sono:
Giacomo Buoncompagni, in “Human security & Digital insecurity. Violence on bodies and socio-
cultural changes in the digital environment” sostiene che le relazioni umane, i luoghi di coesione e
le definizione dell'identità, i processi di formazione a tutti i livelli hanno accusato e accusano l'impatto
con la complessità spesso caotica che non sempre produce conoscenza. Emergenze come flussi
migratori, terrorismo, flussi finanziari trovano nella rete uno spazio in grado di "produrre fatti",
catturare l'attenzione, creare paradigmi, dare un senso e una risposta a relazioni e luoghi di coesione,
cambiare corpo, mente e stato emotivo di i soggetti collegati.
Linda Armano, in “Body Changes and Green Consumption. Embodying and Performing a Vegan
Lifestyle” mira ad aggiungere una nuova interpretazione del veganismo collegando il tema
antropologico dei cambiamenti del corpo al consumo verde e alle scelte dietetiche esplorando le idee
di uno stile di vita privo di prodotti animali e il loro significato politico incarnato usando la
metodologia etnografica.
Antonio Romano, in “La Neo-Immortalità. Corpo, Macchina, Divino” afferma che la macchina è
un elemento fondamentale dell'immaginazione collettiva e dall'antichità ai tempi moderni, fino al
ventesimo secolo e ad oggi, osserverà prima il ruolo essenzialista della macchina come unione. Nei
primi vent'anni del XXI secolo, grazie alla caduta della barriera tra arte e mercato culturale la
macchina cessa di essere un mezzo e prende parte al processo di trasformazione: arriva a sublimare
se stessa in uno stato divino.
Anna Ziliotto, in “Interpretare (e testimoniare) certe modificazioni del corpo: le competenze
dell’antropologa/o nel sistema di giustizia italiano”, riflette sull'importanza di includere le
competenze antropologiche nell'analisi delle culture legate al taglio del corpo nel sistema giudiziario
italiano.
Fabio di Nicola, in “Il corpo che cambia: dall’ibridazione uomo-macchina ai cyborg. Un futuro
distopico o un presente in trasformazione?” afferma che il corpo è ora all'ultima frontiera,
interrogandosi su quale sarà lo scenario che ci apetta nel prossimo futuro.
Simone Borile, in “Isolamento e Sicurezza Sociale: fenomeni di ghettizzazione e di implosione
sociale”, asserisce che la costruzione sociale della sicurezza poggia su modelli comportamentali sicuri
e culturalmente condivisi da una società. L’alterazione di protocolli comportamentali anche a seguito
di contesti emergenziali di natura epidemiologica possono produrre nuovi modelli socio
comportamentali di riferimento influenzando lo stato psicologico dei soggetti coinvolti nei processi
di confinamento forzato.
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L’uscita del secondo numero dell’Anno VI della Rivista è programmata per Dicembre 2020 e avrà
per titolo: “Etnografia dei territori, isolamento sociale, restrizione dello spazio, nuovi riferimenti
culturali”. Il termine ultimo per la consegna dei contributi viene fissato per il 15 novembre 2020.
The release of the second issue of the Year VI of the Journal is scheduled for December 2020 and
will be entitled "Ethnography of territories, social isolation, restriction of space, new cultural
references ". The deadline for submitting contributions is 15 November 2020.
Attendiamo i vostri contributi.
Buon lavoro
Il Direttore Responsabile
Prof. Simone Borile
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RIVISTA ITALIANA DI ANTROPOLOGIA APPLICATA
Diretta da Simone Borile
Numero I – Giugno 2020
A cura di Simone Borile
Indice
SICUREZZA UMANA E INSICUREZZA DIGITALE. VIOLENZA SUI CORPI E MUTAMENTI
SOCIO-CULTURALI NELL’AMBIENTE DIGITALE
HUMAN SECURITY & DIGITAL INSECURITY. VIOLENCE ON BODIES AND SOCIO-
CULTURAL CHANGES IN THE DIGITAL ENVIRONMENT
di Giacomo Buoncompagni ............................................................................................................ 9
BODY CHANGES AND GREEN CONSUMPTION. EMBODYING AND PERFORMING A
VEGAN LIFESTYLE
MODIFICAZIONI DEL CORPO E CONSUMO GREEN. INCORPORAZIONE ED ESIBIZIONE DI
UNO STILE DI VITA VEGANO
di Linda Armano .......................................................................................................................... 15
LA NEO-IMMORTALITÀ. CORPO, MACCHINA, DIVINO
THE NEW IMMORTALITY. BODY, MACHINE, DIVINE
di Antonio Romano ...................................................................................................................... 37
INTERPRETARE (E TESTIMONIARE) CERTE MODIFICAZIONI DEL CORPO: LE
COMPETENZE DELL’ANTROPOLOGA/O NEL SISTEMA DI GIUSTIZIA ITALIANO
INTERPRETING (AND WITNESSING) CERTAIN BODY CHANGES: ANTHROPOLOGICAL
EXPERTISE IN THE ITALIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM
di Anna Ziliotto ............................................................................................................................ 47
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IL CORPO CHE CAMBIA: DALL’IBRIDAZIONE UOMO-MACCHINA AI CYBORG. UN
FUTURO DISTOPICO O UN PRESENTE IN TRASFORMAZIONE?
THE CHANGING BODY: FROM HUMAN-MACHINE HYBRIDIZATION TO CYBORG. A
DYSTOPIAN FUTURE OR A CHANGING PRESENT?
di Fabio Di Nicola ........................................................................................................................ 60
ISOLAMENTO E SICUREZZA SOCIALE: FENOMENI DI GHETTIZZAZIONE E DI
IMPLOSIONE SOCIALE
ISOLATION AND SOCIAL SECURITY: GHETTOISATION AND SOCIAL IMPLOSION
di Simone Borile ........................................................................................................................... 69
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SICUREZZA UMANA E INSICUREZZA DIGITALE. VIOLENZA SUI CORPI
E MUTAMENTI SOCIO-CULTURALI NELL’AMBIENTE DIGITALE
HUMAN SECURITY& DIGITAL INSECURITY. VIOLENCE ON BODIES
AND SOCIO-CULTURAL CHANGES IN THE DIGITAL ENVIRONMENT
di Giacomo Buoncompagni
Abstract
Human relations, places of cohesion and identity definition, training processes at all levels have
accused and are accusing the impact with the often chaotic complexity that does not always produce
knowledge.
The perceived widespread insecurity is the main indicator that measures the criticality reached by
the system. In this way, fear and insecurity manifest themselves in a thousand different appearances
and the risk factors in which relationships are woven do not find answers but "echo" the global
communication.
Emergencies such as migratory flows, terrorism, financial flows find in the network a space able
to "produce facts", capture attention, create paradigms, give a sense and an answer to relations and
places of cohesion, change body, mind and emotional state of the connected subjects.
Keywords: connected bodies, human security, cyber-security, digital media, web
Online deviance and connected bodies
Security is a primary need and can only be analysed from people and for people in their context
which contributes to the emergence of needs.
The challenges facing security professionals today, whose response is often based on probabilistic
calculation, statistics, precision factors, are a measure of the difficulty of identifying the problem.
The very rules of social and ideological conflict are unstable.
In all scales of need, both material and immaterial, security is the first of the needs both objectively
and subjectively, even if, in the most recent studies, there is a tendency to talk and write about detected
security and perceived security. In all cases it is the social actor who acts and perceives a state of fact
in his daily actions (Maslow, 2002)..
Statistical data are important: they give the right context in which social actors act but they are not
sufficient. For example, today Daesh's military power seems to be over. This military defeat in Syria
foreshadows an increased risk of cyber terrorism in the form of a hybrid threat. The age of radicalized
people, from the data of the attacks in Europe in recent years (2015-2018): the generation that relates
more and often only with their computer or smartphone
The precision and the contrast of the attacks is today at zero predictability in the case of "lone wolves"
that activate themselves in the European Countries.
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Also of foreigns fighters in their supposedly disorderly return, a diaspora of individual character, to
their countries of origin. Terrorism is flexible, opportunistic, global even if it bases its assumptions
on six centuries ago.
Fear is defined by motivation but also by its effects. Daesh communicates, knows how to
communicate well, uses effective messages, triggers viral and imitative behaviour through affiliation
to relatively low intensity but high media output attacks. It acts in the weak body and fragile values
of Westerners using the powerful technological tool of the network.
It is the world seen through the net, wrote Bauman, it opens up great possibilities but "it has
consequences, disadvantages that are not calculated. Social media are often an escape from the
problems of our off-line world, a dimension in which we take refuge so as not to face the difficulties
of our real life.1
This is what happens in the reality of the radicalized young people and in this sector an analysis is
necessary which defines cyber security as that "condition for which the cybernetic space is protected
thanks to the adoption of suitable measures of physical, logical and procedural security with respect
to events, of a voluntary or western nature, consisting in the undue acquisition and transfer of data,
in their unlawful modification or destruction, or in the damage, destruction or blocking of the regular
functioning of the networks and information systems or of their constitutive elements".
The systems, connected in a network, have become for the national and trans-national criminality
a profitable instrument for the illegal traffic and for the "recycling" of meaningless bodies and dirty
money thanks also to online banking, which allows to open accounts more easily and to make money
follow indefinite routes.
An illegal activity developed especially in the "Deep Web", the "dark side of the web", which is
inaccessible to search engines because it rests on networks superimposed on the Internet (Darknet)
and is a support base for organized crime, capable of handling typical illegal activities much faster 2.
The Police Forces are constantly engaged at a national and international level to prevent and repress
crimes against the human body: child pornography, the violation of personal data, harassment, attacks
on critical infrastructures and other cases provided for by the regulations in force, but above all, now,
to fight cyber terrorism, which concerns the operations conducted on the web by terrorists,
propaganda, enlistment of potential proselytes, money collection, organization of attacks (Ghioni,
Preatoni 2005)
Al Qaeda and Isis, for example, since their establishment, have always used the network in a secure
and not easily detectable environment to organize and communicate externally most of the attacks
that were perpetrated before and after September 11, 2001. In particular, terrorists hack network
servers to send hard-to-trace messages, training guidelines and propaganda material. The forum is
the main tool they use for their organization, i.e. a site where a series of topics shared by other users'
interventions of armed groups, who then participate in actual guerrilla actions and attacks, are dealt
with.
This structure moves and acts within the Internet with an incredible speed and it is disturbing to
discover that over 80% of the radicalization, "of a religious nature", takes place in this way: one
passes in a short time from simple conversion to radicalization and, in the most difficult cases to
investigate, from identification to emulation. Also the threats introduced into the network have such
1 Bauman, 2014. 2 Marro, 2016.
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a rapidity of diffusion that they can affect the democracy of the recipient countries, arousing the
consensus for radicalization and the ideological persuasion of the terrorists. 3
All these activities are carried out with a skillful use, in complete anonymity, of multi-channel
communication systems and with the use of mental manipulation techniques to induce young people,
above all, to leave school, work and even their families, isolating themselves and becoming fragile.
As has been highlighted in a recent Europol report, the causes of Isis membership can be many: job
loss, school humiliation, isolation, persecution of members of their ethnic, political or religious
community. Even the loss of a loved one can induce a weak person to become a jihadist, to turn his
or her body into an instrument of violence ready to explode, because it represents an extreme escape
route from marginalization and social problems.4
Techno-safety and sub-culture
These are not the only negative aspects of network use. Innumerable researches identify in the new
communication systems the main responsible for the creation of discriminatory attitudes towards
certain social categories, such as, for example, the stereotype and prejudice linked to immigrants,
homosexuals, Muslims, who are often represented by the media in negative contexts.
Moreover, through the network, prejudice against social categories already discriminated against
on the basis of particular historical events is nourished.
It is evident, for example, the ease with which the public opinion often associates an Arab citizen
to a terrorist, increasing the level of prejudice which characterizes this social category or the figure
of the immigrant to that of the criminal.
Another very dangerous phenomenon is that of cyberbullying.
The perpetrators of this illicit behaviour, having the possibility of hiding their face and identity
within the network, can cause great harm to the victims through the improper use of images, verbal
violence and media pillory, etc. Almost all children have Facebook or WhatsApp profiles, which are
also used to attract attention, to impose their ego, to feel strong at the expense of those identified as
weaker or different (Polizia Postale, 2016).
All this in the absence of targeted controls on the part of families, education on the correct use of
social networks also for educational purposes and ignorance of current legislation on the subject .
It is important to note how the problem of network security has become a social issue, complex
and fluid to the point of being increasingly included in training programmes, production and policy
agendas because, while the use of the network is necessary because it supports human activities, it
also creates various risks that need to be identified, analysed and minimised. Therefore, in the face of
these new security needs, a new way of interpreting cyber security is necessary.
The network is revolutionizing our society and our economy, fostering interaction, exchange of
ideas, sharing of information, creating new ways of political and social involvement and economic
and commercial exchange. Moreover, the reduction of network access costs and the development of
broadband will lead to further growth of cyberspace, making it an increasingly crucial factor for
economic, relational and social growth. The increased dependence on cyberspace on the one hand
3 Cesta, 2011. 4 Comunicazione della Commissione al Parlamento Europeo, al Consiglio Europeo e al Consiglio - Decima relazione sui
progressi compiuti verso un’autentica ed efficace Unione della sicurezza.
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offers new opportunities, on the other hand it introduces new criminal threats and new social risks
arising from the use of information systems. 5
However, the problem that arises is not only that of strengthening the defence of national critical
infrastructures, government organisations, companies and individuals from cyber attacks, as we have
seen for cybercrime, cyberterrorism, cyberbullying, etc., but also in relation to the new social risks
arising from them. First of all, the distorted use of personal information that is collected and processed
without the users' knowledge for various purposes for the benefit of different public and private
entities such as app or service providers or the operating system provider used. For example,
companies with different algorithms and analysis procedures, often unknown and inaccessible, are
able to have a real exclusive use of information that can pass through different databases, countries
and legal systems very quickly, making users immediately lose the ability to understand how it is
used.
What is unknown is how this information is processed, which databases are crossed and in what
world the algorithm that draws and judges the user's orientations works, creating a real digital identity.
Data, misinformation and insecurity of bodies on the Net
This form of duplication risks being the only link with the world, posing problems previously
unthinkable. Managed by a multiplicity of subjects, each of which constructs, modifies and circulates
images, the network and social networks are then transformed into a continuous flow of information
introduced into an infinite number of rivulets, which go in the most diverse directions, to the point of
making the identity ever-changing, completely unstable and not responding to the real one. Hence the
need to regulate these processes in order to guarantee conditions of adequate interoperability in
compliance with the principle of competition and equal contractual treatment of persons, bearing in
mind that the platforms operating in the network provide essential public services for the community
and for countless human activities (Buoncompagni, 2018)
Through the network, recruitment begins, and the influence of the message of terror reaches those
who make their bodies the object of insecurity and violence against each other (Censis, 2017).
The body in this sense becomes an instrument of power and competitive struggle, which is used
in the most varied fields: war, politics, but also for the competition for power within any complex
public or private organization. It can be defined as the intentional falsification of data and news in
order to manipulate the perceptions of a target, influence decisions and induce him to act in the desired
way.
Sometimes it is also used to weaken the cognitive and decision-making capabilities of the target,
spreading news that generates confusion and uncertainty in the target. In other words, false or
misleading information is constructed and disseminated to induce the target to make decisions (or to
adopt attitudes or ideas) that are contrary to his or her interests and that favour the interests of the
criminal.
Misinformation is no longer a weapon exclusively endowed by States and their intelligence
services: it is now an instrument within the reach of non-state actors, both legal, political parties,
companies and financial companies, interest groups, non-governmental organizations, as well as
5 Baldoni, 2015.
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illegal, terrorist and subversive groups, criminal organizations, "hidden powers", extremist religious
sects6.
Conclusion
The "single bodies connected" through the network, learn about information in real time from all
parts of the world, can go shopping in the global market, plan a holiday, follow a course of study
assisted by a virtual tutor, meet with friends far away through a Skype video call, etc.
At the same time it can be confused by this virtual reality with consequent risks about the objective
evaluation of perceptions.
Many of the problems of a psycho-sociological nature are related to the escape from real reality
and the inability to distinguish sensations, emotions at various times, during the use or not of virtual
technologies, to the lack of discernment of everything that can lead to dangerous paths.
Even if apparently being a user of a Social Network makes one believe to be part of a community,
to be friends, to be all in solidarity, in reality one realizes too late that the relationships established in
a virtual community are very often false.
That's why today we talk about new techno-phobias, stress from new technologies: staying always
online, constantly checking your mobile phone for fear of not being reachable, waiting for sms or
whatsapps are an example.
6 Germani, 2017.
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BODY CHANGES AND GREEN CONSUMPTION. EMBODYING AND
PERFORMING A VEGAN LIFESTYLE
MODIFICAZIONI DEL CORPO E CONSUMO GREEN. INCORPORAZIONE
ED ESIBIZIONE DI UNO STILE DI VITA VEGANO
di Linda Armano
Abstract
Veganism is usually addressed in studies on medical benefits or eating disorders as well as food
identities that are able to shape and influence society. Through this article, the author aims to add a
new interpretation of veganism by linking the anthropological topic of body changes to green
consumption and dietary choices. Notably, the present analysis aims to explore the ideas of a lifestyle
free of animal products and their embodied political significance using the ethnographic
methodology. The approach used allows us to present veganism as a meaningful strategy that employs
personal values as a response to wider world issues related to environmental degradation and animal
safeguard. Therefore, in this dissertation, the implicit and explicit body modification and vegan
expressions are crucial to understand how veganism is concretized in the Italian context.
Keywords: veganism, body modification, green consumption, free of animal products, consumption
embodiment.
1. Introduction
How can we explain the relation among body, vegan lifestyle and green consumption? How can
this relation be embodied by ethical, health-related and environmental justifications for veganism?
Even if previous studies have never addressed the analysis of the relationship between body change
and green consumption as this article aims to do, here veganism is also interpreted as a sociocultural
ideal transformed into lifestyle consumption. On the contrary, most researches are focused on the
medical system that interprets veganism as a social deviance able to modify
blood metabolites and body composition7. Noting an increasing interest in plant-based eating patterns
such as vegetarian and vegan in Western society, many studies acknowledge the potential effects on
the body and brain8. Furthermore, some researches highlight that in 2015, around 0.4−3.4% of US
adults, 1−2% British adults, and 5−10% of German adults were reported to eat largely plant-based
diets9. These findings have led to an increased awareness that requires a better scientific
7 Mekonen, Haile 2019. 8 Medawar et al. 2019. 9 Mensink et al. 2016.
16
understanding of how plant-based diets affect human health, particularly potentially relevant effects
on mental health and cognitive functions. The debates are controversial in this field, even if most
authors have suggested that plant-based diets exert beneficial effects on health with regard to obesity-
related metabolic dysfunction, type 2 diabetes mellitus and chronic low-grade inflammation10.
Muelrath and Barnard11 address the myth of the nutritional benefits of dairy. After decades of
efforts on behalf of the milk industry to advertise their product as a great source of calcium, they
uncovered the epidemiology around the world reveals that the countries accustomed to consuming
the most dairy, calcium, and animal protein have the highest rates of osteoporotic bone fracture.
Other scholars have noted that vegan diets tend to be lower in omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin D,
calcium, zinc, and the infamous B-1212. In contrast to Muelrath and Barnard, other studies13 assert
that low calcium levels are of special concern to vegans and non-meat eaters, as this can lead to low
bone mineral density and an increased risk of bone fracture. As Craig claims, soy consuming can
effectively counterbalance calcium deficiencies by inhibiting bone resorption. Omega-3 fatty acids
are important for eye, brain, and cardiovascular functioning, and low levels in vegans should be
counteracted by consuming DHA fortified foods.
Other scholars include the vegan phenomenon in eating disorders, especially widespread in
Western culture, which emphasizes individuality, efficiency, the cult of the lean body, unrealistic
expectations of perfection, youth, and beauty14. The most important reason for including veganism in
the category of eating disorder is related to the condition in which people are so concerned about food
that they cannot focus on anything else15. These researches combine vegan lifestyle with body
dysmorphic disorders given that some scholars highlight cases where a person of normal-weight,
afraid of being fat, transforms this preoccupation into socio-political and ethical reasons16.
The way the scientific community and society view veganism is a critical context for interpreting
individual lifestyle decisions. Thus, many scholars highlight the importance of having a
comprehensive context of the healthiness of a vegan diet on a physical and biochemical level.
DeBoer17 offers an interesting insight into the correlation between Western dietary standards and
understandings (or misunderstandings) about health. She states that the demand for meat has
increased fivefold the last century, from 45 to 229 billion kilograms. This is partly due to rising
population levels, but also to the fact that developing countries have begun to mimic the Western
trend of eating high amounts of animal protein. This tendency has historical implications because the
use of animals for multiple purposes was a way to distinguish status (i.e., those who consume more
animal products have a higher socio-political, socio-economic status). However, it also deepens the
misunderstanding of the value of animal versus plant-based protein. DeBoer refers to a Dutch study
on plant-based protein substitutes, which ultimately showed the large psychological distance between
consumers and experts in their view of protein sources and the merits of plant-based proteins. This
implies, as DeBoer acknowledges, that the simple demand to reduce meat-consumption will not find
much understanding among consumers and may even be counterproductive.
10 Le Sabaté, 2014. 11 Muelrath and Barnard, 2015. 12 Craig, 2009. 13 Mann 2014. 14 Novák, 2010. 15 Soukup, Dvořáková, 2016. 16 Motta, 2010. 17 DeBoer, 2011.
17
Some other works have addressed questions of vegan identity. Muelrath and Barnard18 mention
that plant-based diets need to be a sort of grassroots movement, with goals that can become
acknowledged from an individual level that permeates to families and communities afterward. These
applies to the vegan identity in that it inherently requires individuals to associate themselves as vegans
in order for the movement to be understood and applied on a wider scale. Moreover, Capaldi19
discussed how food identities are shaped and influenced by society (i.e. how people associate
themselves with what they eat). She identified several studies that show food-related values that are
passed down from parent to child are more effective and more enduring than taste preferences.
Capaldi claims that the most common plant-based diets become in a family context, that meat-eating
becomes more an issue of values and less of mere preference. As a consequence, societal attitudes
concerning meat consumption, and presumably, the transmission of attitudes towards meat from
parents to children, becomes more substantial. Thus, the values that parents equate with certain foods
play a significant role in the way children respond to those foods.
Finally, Corey Fields has introduced an important connection between identity development and
behavioral decisions. Although his work has focused on female knitting groups, his approach has
revealed concepts applicable to understanding vegan identity formation. The author notes that identity
theorists have long demonstrated that identity structures our behaviors as we move through the world
and interact with culture. In identity theory, identities are the meanings that individuals associate with
themselves. These meanings set the standard for behavior and have implications for meaning making
and action. When behaviors are consistent with the identity standard, there will be internal and
external validation of identity. Negative feelings arise when individuals do not live up to identity
standards.
In general, people become vegans for different reasons, such as religious beliefs20, health
reasons21, lifestyle changes22 or to support the cause of animal welfare.
In contrast to previous studies, the present analysis, starting from the concept for which the vegan
body is socially constructed, aims to explore the ideas of a lifestyle free of animal products and their
embodied political significance using ethnographic methodology. Through a sample of twelve
interviews with Italian vegans, the analysis details the significance of viewing veganism through a
cultural lens.
The approach used allows to present veganism as a meaningful strategy to use personal values
through action as a response to wider world issues to understand how these values are embodied by
the interviewed vegans.
Therefore, in this dissertation, the implicit and explicit modification of the body and new vegan
expressions are crucial to understand how veganism is concretized in the Italian context.
18 Muelrath and Barnard, 2015. 19 Capaldi, 1996. 20 Sabate, 2004. 21 Craig, 2010. 22 Agrawall et al., 2014.
18
2. Ethnographic research
Thanks to the lens on body changes through food choices, the interdisciplinary approach of the
present study is useful from different points of view. For example, it allows to focus the attention on
food-related ways of production and food choices reflecting the ways some people explore the
meaning of the current exploitation of nature and, at the same time, try to propose alternative eco-
sustainable options. Moreover, it shows how food practices can promote significant individual
changes also in their daily relationship.
By analyzing the portrayal of vegans in the Italian context, this study pays attention to four
fundamental aspects of vegan diets: 1) definitions of veganism (including rules and systems of
eating); 2) reasons for becoming vegan (including beliefs, motivations, values, and influences of
veganism); 3) vegan practices (including where vegans get their food, what they eat, and how they
prepare it); 4) vegan sociability (including who vegans eat with as well as the social impact and
consequences of being vegan). These social practices have helped me during the ethnographic
research to deeply interconnect cultural values and vegans’ body change thanks to the embodiment
of these social meanings.
This ethnographic research took place over a period of six months, between May and November
2019, with the permission of AssoVegan – Associazione Vegani Italiani Onlus23 which provided the
interviewees from over Italy. AssoVegan is a non-profit organization composed of health
professionals, activists, and educators who are dedicated to educating the public on veganism and the
interrelated issues of health, nutrition, ecology, ethics, and world hunger by creating a vision of a
happier, healthier, and cleaner world for all.
The interviews were conducted both personally and on Skype. All people were interviewed in-
depth, each for 60-90 minutes. I did short interviews of 15-20 minutes each with some people,
depending on their availability, to better focus on some of their cultural values. The semi-structured
interviews were data recorded and transcribed to analyse the repeated themes emerged to develop a
theory able to highlight the awareness of vegan ideas among the participants. The interviews were
conducted informally and based on dietary habits and the motivations that support their food choices.
Furthermore, during the interviews, I paid attention to gender, age, education, and occupation, to
verify if this research agrees with some literary productions which suppose that vegans and
vegetarians tend to fall into similar demographic backgrounds24. Since I asked for personal
motivations and dietary or health stories, working with a small number of respondents was the best
way to apply ethnographic research methods to the process. Moreover, during the interviews I wanted
to gain a deep comprehension of how veganism makes sense for the people I spoke to and, following
an inductive process, I wanted to understand how their choices could be embodied by them and
modify their body.
Some important questions that I asked them were:
- How do you describe veganism and what does it mean to you?
- How long you have been practicing veganism?
- What kind of diet are you transitioning from?
- What factors inspired you to became vegan?
23 https://www.assovegan.it/ 24 Aguilar, 2015.
https://www.assovegan.it/
19
- Are some factors more important than others? (i.e. Animal welfare, costs, nutrition,
environment, etc.).
- What social relationships have affected your shifts? (i.e. Vegan “gurus”, social acceptance,
family, spouse, friends, etc.).
- What kind of eating habits did you have growing up?
- Did you educate yourself on a certain aspect of veganism? If so, how?
- How did you formally make the transition (gradual, all at once)?
- What is your “strictness” of veganism? (i.e. gelatin, makeup, leather, wool, honey, etc.).
- What is the most significant part of being vegan?
- Are there any tangible differences in health?
This study used a constant comparative method25 to identify emerging patterns across transcripts,
the books examined and a hermeneutical method to interpret the data26 and to move between the
findings and the relevant literature27.
From my interviews, I captured similarities and differences between participant’s responses, from
which I was able to conceptualize their meaning and capture the essence of what was discussed. This
required to put together values, objectives, and rationales among participants in a cohesive and
detailed way.
Following other studies28, I was able to see that vegans highlighted the benefits of veganism for
animals, the environment and human health. For the vegan participants, witnessing the suffering of
animals and realizing the dominant dismissive attitudes towards their suffering are the major
challenges of veganism. For overcoming the barriers to veganism, vegan participants declared that
they had searched for information on various related topics, cultivated cognitive and emotional
strategies, and joined vegan communities. To deeply understand this information, it was useful to
compare these responses with results from other research that also focused on non-vegans, who were
not considering going vegan, and on non-vegans who were considering going vegan29. As Souza et
al. assert, the first group of non-vegans often do not consider being vegan because they believe that
veganism is or may be unhealthy or “unnatural”. In the same research, the scholars also state that the
participant belonging to the second group were concerned about some negative impacts of meat-
eating on animals and the environment. Moreover, Souza’s study shows that non-vegans, who were
considering going vegan, generally adopted intermediate positions between the two previous groups.
In contrast to them, individuals who identify themselves as non-vegans and environmentalists,
experienced cognitive dissonance (a specific type of psychological discomfort) when exposed to
information about the environmental impact of the meat, dairy and egg industries. Therefore, the
dissonance could have been a driver for the construction of beliefs by some participants, such as the
belief that veganism was perceived as unnatural and harmful to human health and the environment.
Povey30 reaches the same conclusions as Souza et al., examining attitudes towards meat-eating,
vegetarian, and vegan diets of 111 individuals in the United Kingdom, including 25 meat-eaters, 26
meat-avoiders, 34 vegetarians, and 26 vegans. Some of his most interesting results include the fact
25 Glaser and Strauss, 1967. 26 Thompson et al., 1989; Thompson, 1997; Arnould and Thompson, 2005. 27 Spiggle,1994. 28 Souza et a. 2020, p. 3. 29 Ivi. p. 4. 30 Povey, 2001.
20
that only meat-eaters thought that eating meat was good, and that vegan diets were considered
restrictive by those who follow other dietary practices. The scholar suggests that individuals should
reaffirm their own dietary choices.
3. Body modification and Veganism: embodied knowledge of green consumption
Body modifications refer to any form of change in a person’s natural physical appearance or
anatomy. This can be achieved through piercing, surgery, exercise, makeovers, tattooing but also
through dietary choices.
According to the “embodiment paradigm”, the present analysis is founded on the premise that
bodily experiences are fundamental to how we make sense of the world, and how meaning is created.
All knowledge starts in the somatic relations with the world around us31.
According to Johnson, understanding is pre-linguistic, rooted in the patterns of our bodily
activity32. Meaning materializes in the realm of practical action as we engage in embodied creative
dialogue with the world and with others around us. The structure of the body gives shape to what
Johnson calls corporeal logic, which influences both the ways we perceive and the meaning we find
in the world: «Reason does not drop down from above like a transcendent dove; rather, it emerges
from the corporeal logic and inference structure of our bodily, sensorimotor experience»33. Our bodies
are not static, knowledge is transitive, and it is made up of our embodied engagement with material
and social worlds. For “Embodiment” the French socio-anthropologist David Le Breton34 suggests
that the body is dislocated from the condition of the object to a cultural subject. He understands it as
an existential territory. This idea is in agreement with Ortega, who adds: “The body becomes a
creative space and a Utopia, a virgin continent to be conquered”35. Therefore, the body becomes the
object of intense semiotic scrutiny in the definition of personal identities and the circulation of social
values36.
Many authors highlight many possible of body modifications. These modifications range from
simpler practices such as hair straightening and curling, to radical forms of body modification, such
as body mutilation and plastic surgery, passing, of course, through body art (tattoos and piercing) and
bodybuilding37.
Despite the many types of body modifications, as a result of the exploratory nature of the present
research, I have focused my attention on the vegan issues able to modify the body of vegan people.
Veganism is commonly explained as an individual and collective enterprise that aims to eliminate,
as far as possible, all forms of animal exploitation. It involves, amongst other practices, the adoption
of a diet free of meat, dairy products, eggs, and any other animal-derived product. In recent years, the
vegan movement and diet have become increasingly popular. The extent to which individuals,
institutions and groups all over the world adhere to veganism has crucial consequences for animals
and the environment38.
31 Lakoff and M. Johnson, 1999. 32 M. Johnson, 1999. 33 Ivi, p. 86. 34 Le Breton, 2013. 35 Ortega, 2008, p. 13. 36 Turner, 1995. 37 Silva, 2011; Le Breton, 2009 e 2014; Featherstone, 2005. 38 Souza et al., 2020.
21
Veganism differs from vegetarianism in that while vegetarianism advocates abstinence from
consuming meat; it does not take a stance against the consumption of other animal products such as
dairy products, egg, honey, silk, wool, leather, and the like. Preece states that «veganism starts with
vegetarianism and carries it through to its logical conclusion»39. Veganism is regarded as the most
mature and post-conventional ethical stage that aims at extending the notion of social justice to non-
human animals.40
To deeply understand the embodiment of vegan ideals among the Italian vegans interviewed, I
considered the human body as the essential instrument through which they personalize their desire to
protect animals and the environment and to improve human health. In general, the area of body
modification includes all bodily alterations that help to change the natural state of the human body
into a body desired by the culture where one lives41. In agreement with Soukup and Dvořáková, I
observed, while discussing with the vegan interviewees, a particular way of disciplining their bodies
to satisfy personal needs, specific treatment of the body in institutions, emotional management, and
various types of activities that lead them to respond to certain issues through dietary choices.
To systematize the information collected among the interviewed vegans, the present study
analyzes their journey through body change in six main narratives that include:
- narrative of the social circle;
- narrative of geography;
- narrative of education and self-education;
- narrative of health;
- narrative of ethics;
- narrative of the environment.
These narratives depict the shared behaviors, ideologies, justification, and influences behind
veganism. The repetition of particular themes, emerged as symbolic vehicles of meaning during the
interviews, show that each narrative is meant to interweave the stories of the interviewees with their
experience of body changes. Therefore, in the present ethnography research, body modifications may
mean a way for people to reposition themselves within a social connection and an affinity with a
lifestyle free from the consumption of animal products.
- Narrative of the social circle.
One of the most important reference points for vegan people interviewed is the AssoVegan
Association. Most people here can be engaged in daily activism and find in this virtual place forms
of education sharing conversation, lectures and books, blogs or articles. The online community is
very supportive of the creation of a lager Italian vegan virtual group where people can experience a
feeling of belonging, as well as support often through kind comments and welcoming conversations.
In many of these cases, participants mentioned that these supportive people thought veganism was
healthy thanks to the free animal diet.
But, to increase the values of veganism, the interviews highlight the importance of a direct
relationship between vegan people. Surrounding themselves with supportive friends was imperative
for the people interviewed to find the values and deeper significance of veganism. The social
interactions between vegans reinforce inclusion and a sense of community. For older interviewees,
39 Preece,2008, p. 298. 40 Singer, 2009. 41 Soukup, Dvořáková, 2016.
22
friendships developed another sort of meaning, too: «Our friends support us in our veganism not
necessarily because they are vegan, but because they wanted to preserve us, in terms of our health
and our age» (Interview to Mario, Desenzano, 25th May 2019).
Two interviewees also mentioned the role of religion (Buddhism) and how this has affected their
veganism. One person interviewed the religion: «Is very much in tune with veganism. All sentient
beings suffer in an interrelated network. To cause no harm is one of the principles of Buddhism»
(Interview to Matteo, Cernobbio, 12th September 2019). While the interviewee did not grow up in a
Buddhist family but rather practices Buddhism as a parent in his own family, veganism is a way to
reinforce and cement one’s beliefs.
In some cases, respondents emphasized the role of the family as a significant, intimate, and
trustworthy social setting where vegans can share their habits and values. In particular, for three
young interviewees (aged between 22 and 29), there was a connection between family and the
adaptation and the transition to veganism on two main levels: the influence of their parents and the
lifestyle of their families, and the influence of being a parent and raising children. Each of these levels
has its intricacies that express the elaborate relationship between the social environment of the family
and veganism. In particular, the youngest girl interviewed (22 years old) had supportive parents and
beneficial familial lifestyles that favoured their path towards veganism. She explained that:
«Her mom has been vegetarian since she was at university, and about five years ago she went
vegan. I never grew up in the kind of family where you eat meat at every meal. And it was always
just ‘clean’ meat that my mom would prepare, like chicken and turkey. As a child, I rarely ate red
meat, maybe sometimes at my grandma’s or when I had an occasional burger at a barbeque»
(Interview to Cecilia, Treviso, 24th May 2019).
Having eaten mostly vegetarian meals as a child, and a mother who went vegan before the
interviewee, played a role in this interviewee’s decision-making process, because plant-based foods
were habitual, normalized in her home life. For others, spousal support: «Is imperative to becoming
vegan in a family setting, like having a husband who cooks vegan dinners every night» (Interview to
Monica, Milano, 1st June 2019). Many interviewees expressed the importance of the example of a
vegan spouse, which acts as a control system («If they’re eating this way, I should eat this way» -
Interview to Cecilia, Treviso, 24th May 2019) and as a source of inspiration: «My husband has never
made a specifical verbal commitment [to veganism], but I’m watching him slowly change. He used
to buy yogurt, but recently he came back with coconut yogurt instead. And I didn’t tell him to»
(Interview to Monica, Milano, 1st June 2019). But, overall, the most beneficial aspect of the familial
social setting is simply that of encouragement, regardless of whether or not any other family member
is a vegan. Family Support recognizes and affirms the individual’s decision to become vegan, a
mechanism a mechanism for raising trust and continuing to practice veganism. It also encourages
conversation:
«My closest relatives, so my mom, step-dad, and brothers, have for the most part accepted. They
made jokes every once in a while, but they were never mean. We would have conversations about it.
They feel like they need to eat meat for iron etc. And I reassure them that I can get my iron from
beans. So, we have these conversations, and they’re not antagonistic, but as the years go by, they’re
more interested, or they’ve incorporated things I make when I’m at home» (Interview to Claudia,
Roma, 21st August 2019).
23
In this sense, a home environment that encourages open dialogue and personal choice is beneficial
to veganism.
Thus, the influence of becoming a parent – raising children and expanding a familial network
outside of what you grew up with – is a fascinating nuance in the vegan experience. Two interviewees,
as vegan parents, wondered whether or not to raise their children in a vegan way. Both concluded that
the decision to become vegan should be their child’s, although presenting their children with vegan
the rhetoric and ingredients to make vegan meals is a natural response. The two parents interviewed
sometimes give their children eggs and salmon when they craved them or lacked proteins. In
particular, one interviewee stated:
«When you raise very young children, you’re exhausted. You try to maximize your energy. And
you don’t want to deprive your kids. So, I’m always facing choices: Am I going to feed my kids dairy
and meat or not? I know some parents that don’t want their kids to be plant-based. For that reason,
the parents let it go» (Interview to Paolo, Torino, 2nd September 2019).
Therefore, there is a level of flexibility required when considering the diets of children to foster
an environment where they can make their own informed choices. This is easier for some parents
rather than others. For relatively young children, the complexity of choosing a vegan diet is not as
prevalent as when it comes to interacting with non-vegans or to being able to cook their meals. For
other families with teenagers, veganism can be typified as an imposition: «I’m trying to move my
family more towards a vegan diet and it’s hard. It got to the point where I realized that even using
that word was a mistake. Don’t classify the meal. Talk about what’s delicious in it and leave it to the
meal as is» (Interview to Lorenzo, Padova, 4th November 2019). So, balancing the desires as a parent
about what to cook for the family with the reality of raising children is not an effortless process. The
choice to become a vegan is strengthened by personal conviction, which is helped by the food and
information that parents can provide but solidifies with the individual choice. Nevertheless, all
interviewees expressed the importance of putting the health of their children first, something, which
required a deeper understanding of the healthiness of a vegan diet. This sometimes makes it difficult
for vegan parents, especially parents of young children, to deal with the medical community.
Other people interviewed had vegan friends who had stimulated their decision to try veganism for
themselves. These friendships set an example of how and why to become vegan and were helpful
because:
«Having vegan friends around was motivating. I think for me, ultimately, it was seeing the
example of some of my friends, seeing how they had adapted so well, and talking to them about what
they had got out of it, and challenging myself to get out of the routine of my diet at the moment. I
have a good friend who runs a vegan blog and I cook the food that she has advertised. And we would
go to the vegan restaurants together during conferences. I lost the excuse of not being more plant-
based» (Interview to Davide, Brescia, 25th October 2019).
Having someone to converse with, or simply to try new foods with, is encouraging. Furthermore,
this reflects the value of having a close friend to work through the nuances of plant-based diets and
how to guide a transition. Again, having someone to consult with is crucial:
24
«My friend is my role model on all of this: he had high cholesterol, which was the proximal cause
of his becoming vegan, and of course veganism solved that. I saw his capacity to take control of his
diet as something I could do… and I watched him and his fitness change. He lost 30 kg, and that was
reassuring (Interview to Emanuela, Reggio Emilia, 15th July 2019).
What these interviews highlight is the importance of seeing the people, that you perceive as related
to a certain social or collective level, making certain choices and actions that can be replicated. The
changes become more attainable when someone, who admires them or identifies with them, can make
the same choices or perform the same actions, too.
Thus, the social narrative during the interviews has illuminated several important subthemes for
becoming vegan: identification with certain groups, religion, perceptions of veganism and
justifications for the diet, how parents guide their children towards veganism and navigate through
the difficulties of making food choices for or with them, how children can impact their parents
through moral inquiry, and how friendships can inform and support individuals who attempt
veganism. Each of these aspects emphasizes the value of connecting with others with whom one feels
comfortable and comparable, to help adaptation and transition to veganism.
- Narrative of geography.
The geographical narrative can be described as how the physical location, where one has lived and
currently lives, influences the adaptation to veganism. This was an important narrative for many
interviewees, who addressed the role of places through the lens of accessibility and influence of local
food options (e.g., the presence of grocery stores, restaurants that support and have plant-based
options on their menus, etc.). Having relatively easy access to grocery stores and restaurants, vegans
can feel their lifestyle choice more possible. In Italy, there are many grocery stores as well as
restaurants that support vegan preferences. Nevertheless, geography can work for or against one’s
ability to be a vegan because not everyone has the same ability to find or afford fresh ingredients.
Food deserts, or areas in which access to nutritious food is not available, are common in smaller
Italian cities:
«If you live in a place with few grocery stores, and not enough produce, that’s hard. So, where you
are geographically localized, that’s a barrier. […] My friend lives in a small village in Val Camonica,
and it is very difficult for him to find the products he needs. Furthermore, if you’re in a place where
it’s harder to get these things, then they will cost you more» (Interview to Monica, Milano, 1st June
2019).
The other expressed veganism is becoming easier because of shifts in economic trends. Many
restaurants, as well as grocery stores, have become conscious of the rise in veganism and have
specialized in animal-free products. As the vegan woman interviewed above points out, these
possibilities have started to be common in the biggest and tourist Italian cities, such as Rome, Milan,
Venice, Florence, etc. or near them. Nevertheless, going out to eat is a big barrier for many of the
younger, sometimes single vegans interviewed, for whom going out to dinner and trying new
restaurants is an important part of their social life. Some interviewees described going out to eat: «As
something not enjoyable» especially for those who are: «concerned about dietary strictness. I get
stressed going to a random restaurant or a place I’ve never been before, because it’s embarrassing to
go to restaurants and change the ingredients on the menu in front of people» (Interview to Cecilia,
25
Treviso, 24th May 2019). Vegans who are new to the lifestyle tend to feel uncomfortable changing
menu items in this way, afraid of the way their friends or meal counterparts will see them. Trying
new restaurants can be frustrating if they haven’t had time to review the menu, or the restaurant is
unwilling to make changes. Because of this, some other respondents recognized that the only time
they had not been vegan, before formally making the transition, was when they had gone out to eat at
restaurants.
In this category, I also include some barriers that made veganism a challenge for the interviewees.
I chose to include these difficulties for respondents because I consider them as concrete factors able
to influence their ability to act and real factors that had to be overcome as part of the process of
becoming vegan and maintaining the lifestyle. These include going out to eat, cooking at home,
traveling that polarize the vegan community from the non-vegan community.
Most interviewees stressed the importance of knowing where and how to cook. Indeed, for those
who did not know where to cook, they also said they had difficulty in knowing how to prepare food
in the best possible way. As asserted by interviewees, vegan cooking requires creativity for food to
taste good and be presentable and requires knowledge for meals to be nutritionally complete. As a
vegan woman affirmed: «Being a vegan is a huge job» (Interview to Monica, Milano, 1st June 2019).
For other interviewees, cooking was a challenge confounded by having non-vegan family members,
such as children, as it appeared to be an action not belonging to the usual family context. In addition,
family members may have different palates and preferences, and attractiveness for everyone at
mealtimes is a challenge for non-vegans. To convince some relatives, an interviewee asserted:
«I need to have more infrastructure where I not only talk about why it’s important but show people
how to do it. The place where I buy and cook food is very important to me. (…) Confidence and
knowledge of vegan cooking are fundamental» (Interview to Federica, Parma, 21st May 2019).
Nevertheless, cooking is a place and time-consuming, for both vegan individuals and vegan
families. This represented a barrier for some interviewees because: «We live in a culture where you
think ‘fast, fast, fast.’ But you have to cook. You have to spend time in the kitchen. And you need to
have a refrigerator with food that will go badly if you don’t cook it» (Interview to Federica, Parma,
21st May 2019).
Furthermore, travel has been an obstacle for interviewees who have conducted field research and
whose professions lead them outside their county. For example, one interviewee conducted research
in India and Greece, which required a yearly field trip. Although India is largely vegetarian: «they
cook in clarified butter, so it’s really hard to avoid ghee and yogurt. (…) Moreover, in Greece was
difficult as well, given that seafood is their culture» (Filippo, Napoli, 29th October 2019).
- Narrative of education and self-education.
I consider educational narrative as the way in which one has had access to resources, the effort to
actively seek information and participation in an environment able to influence the adaptation to
veganism.
For two interviewees the period of the university was crucial to inform their decisions. Given that
all the interviewees have completed or are in the process of completing (at least) a bachelor’s degree
at university, this narrative could probably be pertinent by further reflecting the significance of higher
education for veganism. University was depicted as influential for two interviewees for several
26
reasons such as by moving away of the home, community development, the period of their education,
and what they chose to study.
For those interviewed who described the importance of their living situation, this transition meant
moving from a home with their parents. This was particularly important for topic because it meant
loosening the grip on their family's eating habits: «As soon as I got to university and my mom didn’t
cook for me, I stopped having meat at all» (Interview to Claudia, Roma, 21st August 2019). This
feeling was reiterated by the other interviewee: «when I was able to make these decisions, to work
out, to eat better, to research nutrition and the benefits of veganism, I wasn’t at home. So, I didn’t
have to involve my parents, who are both sometimes unhealthy» (Filippo, Napoli, 29th October 2019).
So, for those who feel unable or restricted by the dietary practices ingrained in their home life, the
transition period of the university can open the door for independent choices.
One interviewee who fell in older age group (60+) discussed the relevancy of the timing of their
international undergraduate education and how it has aligned with the early rights movements and
periods of intense activism in their generation:
«I got to university (in the 1970s) thinking I can’t kill animals. So, I definitely shouldn’t eat them
if I can’t kill them. So, this was strictly on ethical grounds. A lot of these considerations were going
on. The ‘70s seemed like a time of new thoughts, and people were considering new things, new
values. Those values are still in the foreground today – especially veganism, because even 10, 15
years ago we didn’t understand what it was at all. I went to study engineering in Paris and students
back then really believed they could change the world. What were peripheral issues during the 1970s
- Civil rights, the environment, and feminism - became core values in many countries. Maybe, for
those reasons, I started to be interested in animal rights when I got to university, and I remember there
was a group of students on campus about an animal right. After some years, I started reading about
how cheese and other animal by-products were produced» (Sergio, Ancona, 13th November 2019).
As the interviewed vegan person asserted, sometimes universities can support and host groups of
students, which means that they can unite individuals of the same age with the same interests.
One interviewee expressed the value of studying science in a high level context to inform a
transition to veganism: «I received my training on veganism through university courses and my work,
and as a biologist I felt more exposed to it than the average citizen» (Filippo, Napoli, 29th October
2019). The pursuit of a science degree is valuable because it can introduce individuals to reliable,
research-based data. Nonetheless, this should not trivialize the importance of pursuing other degrees
and learning about vegan ideals in other ways: «I have read a lot for my philosophy work on animal
rights, and I realized that the consumption of dairy products and eggs involves as much violence as
the consumption of meat» (Interview to Monica, Milano, 1st June 2019). Therefore, the values,
rationality and goals of veganism are interdisciplinary, making possible its exposure to them possible
through diverse approaches.
Moreover, a significant number of interviewees have pursued training as a profession becoming
professors. Because of this, each of these interviews included a discussion about the “platform” of
being a professor – what it means to be in an educational position as a vegan, and how, if anything,
they combine their scholarship and life choices:
«I studied biology at university. So, I’m aware of food production practices, how this affects the
environment and access to food, how we are using our resources to feed people, and how we might
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reconsider them. Even if I wasn’t vegan but, in a field, also scientifically related to environment.
After a few years, I built my job on this knowledge, and now I’m a dietary consultant» (Filippo,
Napoli, 29th October 2019).
Another interesting point of discussion for this kind of narration is the way to self-education. The
latter is well represented by the following sentence asserted by a person interviewed: «Sometimes,
even when you deprive the body of things, it is to get in deeper contact with the self. We lose
something that enriches the self or others. It is the body that speaks to the world» (Interview to
Francesco, Verona, May 2nd, 2019). The practice just explained associate vegan habits with a sort of
spiritual practice of food taboo. There are many examples in anthropological literature of dietary
norm which can govern particular phases of the human life cycle and can be associated with special
events such as menstruation, pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, and – in traditional societies –
preparation for hunting, battle, marriage, funeral, etc. On the other hand, food taboos have a long
history and one ought to expect a sound explanation for the existence (and persistence) of certain
dietary customs in a given culture. However, this is a much-debated view and no theory may explain
why people use special food taboos. Even if most research focuses on “exotic” contexts where food
taboos are applied to determinant circumstances, it has rarely been addressed to study taboos of green
consumption food as well as vegan food taboos.
- Narrative of health.
The health narrative can be described as the way in which the tangible and deeper understanding
of the relationship between food and health influences adaptation to veganism. For some
interviewees, a question related to their own or their family’s health was the catalyst for attempting
veganism. A variation on this theme was the way respondents dealt with genetic predispositions, from
family or personal history with diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, heart disease, lactose
intolerance and obesity. An interviewee discussed:
«There’s a history of diabetes on Dad’s side of the family, and Dad himself is in the early stages
of pre-diabetic. I know red meat is a driver of that. Also, high cholesterol and high blood pressure run
in my family. I do not want to put myself in a situation where any of that would be an issue» (Filippo,
Napoli, 29th October 2019).
For many interviewees who prioritized health in their adaptation and transition to veganism, the
physical responses their bodies received were important for the recognition of the power of food, and
the way they engaged in lifestyle. As one interviewee suggests:
«The reason I changed was because of my health. And I’ve seen things improve. The drugs I was
taking I no longer had to be taken. It got worse before it got better, because it was a detoxification
process. But just by eating differently, your body feels different. I decided to keep doing it, which
made my life better, instead of having to take medication» (Interview to Emanuela, Reggio Emilia,
15th July 2019).
She concluded by mentioning: «I’d rather pay a higher price in food than in medicine». This
particular interviewee opened up about her history of blood clotting; she had two blood clots in her
legs in 2012:
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«So I got genetic tests done, which revealed I have a genetic mutation that makes me clot. I decided
to seek medical advice, but after following their recommendations and taking their medications for a
year, it didn’t seem to me that my health was improving. Two weeks after I changed my diet the
swelling went down immediately» (Interview to Emanuela, Reggio Emilia, 15th July 2019).
These physical reactions were reiterated in other interviews. An older interviewee affirmed:
«What helped me stay with veganism initially was the blood test. I did the blood test before I
started and pretty shortly after. My blood chemistry changed so dramatically in three weeks, that was
all the incentive I needed to stick with it. There it was, in black and white. Because other things are
harder to assess. This was very demonstrable, something that can be measured» (Interview to Davide,
Brescia, 25th October 2019).
During the interviews, several other important physical answers were raised to become vegans.
Nonetheless, weight loss was never discussed as the sole motivation for becoming vegan. Other health
responses included increased energy and a renewed ability to exercise, migraine loss, and a
normalized menstrual cycle three months after becoming vegan.
An important aspect of the health story for older interviewees was ageing. One interviewee had:
«A desire to age as healthy as possible in healthy conditions, which involved deciding that animal
products were not good for you» (Interview to Mario Desenzano, 25th May 2019). The interviewee
continued to assert that:
«I think typically young people do it for ethical reasons when they realize that they need to stop
participating in this behavior. Whereas people that are my age come to it for more selfish reasons,
such as personal health. We start thinking about mortality. We recognize our really bad family history
of heart disease. So, I guess we all eventually end up having the same values» (Interview to Mario
Desenzano, 25th May 2019).
The interviewee reiterated the value in taking into account one’s own health, such as questioning
one's life span and what it means for one's immediate social circle. Nonetheless, the vegans
interviewed were able to recognize the multitude of lifestyle benefits. For example, if one’s intentions
were for health, one could recognize its significance for animal ethics. If one’s intentions were for
animal ethics, one could recognize its significance for health.
Many interviewees appreciated and stressed the importance of health awareness when practicing
veganism because it requires careful decision-making and conscious choice.
Veganism slows down the entire process of eating by requiring an understanding of the ingredients
of something before consuming it. For some interviewees, this recognition allowed them to reflect on
their previous eating habits: «You see the exchange of food as something completely utilitarian. Food
in and food out. You stop thinking about it. Now I think about eating more as if food was the energy
of an engine. It’s a much more practical way of looking at food» (Interview to Emanuela, Reggio
Emilia, 15th July 2019). The experience of eating becomes more enjoyable and comprehensible by
looking at food in this light. Moreover, for this interviewee the pleasure of eating differed between a
non-vegan and a vegan diet: where the previous one concerned indulgence, the latter transformed
eating into an experience that required the application of knowledge.
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This consciousness has allowed vegans to understand what foods make them feel better:
«I feel so much better physically, it’s hard to explain. I just feel this lightness. I have a heightened
sensitivity to junk, to anything that is fried or heavy, even if it is vegan. I’m more aware of how my
body reacts to food now, and it’s much easier for me, even when I have a casual craving for candy or
sweets, it’s easier for me to not eat them because I know plant-based whole foods make my body feel
better» (Interview to Emanuela, Reggio Emilia, 15th July 2019).
The recognition of how one’s body reacts physically to the foods you put into it is therefore an
important source of motivation for vegans. For some interviewees, this made the understanding of
certain bodily reactions understandable and addressable. For example:
«When I craved protein, I ate beans. I remembered to put them in almost every meal…And at some
point, I realized that B12 would make me lethargic. So, I now take B12 pills once or twice a week.
And since there aren’t many vegan sweets, my sugar consumption has dropped considerably»
(Filippo, Napoli, 29th October 2019).
Food-awareness lead to body-awareness, and being vegans, many interviewees were able to better
assess what their body needs and why. As one interviewee stated: «I am more conscious about how
much I eat. I tend to eat less and enjoy it more now» (Interview to Mario Desenzano, 25th May 2019).
Lastly, with the awareness of the benefits of vegan foods came the awareness of the detriments of
non-vegan foods. For one interviewee, this meant processing his thoughts on dairy products:
«It’s mostly about health, but also about how disgusting it sounds. We are the only species on the
planet that consumes milk from another species. Would it be socially acceptable if we drank rat milk
or cat milk? Or even other human beings’» (Interview to Davide, Brescia, 25th October 2019).
A more robust discussion about the interviewees’ responses and feelings towards non-vegan food
production can be found in the discussion of ethical narratives.
- Narrative of ethics.
Vegan people could be inserted in the largest community of animal liberators and advocates of
deep ecology who are concerned about different units – whole species, or habitats, or individual
animals, and sometimes come into conflict (Garner 2015; Nelson et al. 2016). Compassionate morality can
be linked, in the words of vegan people interviewed, to ecological justice which refers to solidarity
between species and frames several concerns such as the situations of animals used in the medical
and food production industries. The ethical narrative is perhaps the most related to veganism. Ethical
concerns are important for many vegans because they emphasize altruism and awareness in everyday
behavior. How or why individuals can value altruism, and how or why individuals can be empathetic
to others, is somewhat inexplicable to the vegans interviewed. As one interviewee felt: «It’s not just
the arguments in favor of ethics, it’s something about affection or emotion that is the glue that binds
us to those insights. And that’s the deep mystery of ethics» (Interview to Francesco, Verona, May
2nd, 2019). There is something more in the ethical narrative than the simple recognition that
mistreating others is wrong. The moral considerations of the animal agriculture industry can
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0308275X17723973https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0308275X17723973
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precipitate strong and often overwhelming emotions for vegans. These emotions are what commit
them to the cause.
Concern for animal welfare was the most notable value during these conversations, something that
tended to incite major grief, especially with regard to the lack of empathy on the part of the non-
vegans, and the living conditions, the treatment, and the ultimate demise of the animal. There were
personal experiences and general awareness of the realities of the industry that triggered these
emotions for the vegans I interviewed. For one vegan, this was described by a family trip to a farm
decades ago:
«It left an impression when I saw a cow that was slaughtered when I was about 8 or 9 years old.
My brother and I were looking for rabbits on this farm, and we came across the slaughter area. It was
right there, out in the open. Anybody could see it. And we were just in total shock» (Interview to
Cecilia, Treviso, 24th May 2019).
Having a visual association, as heartbreaking as it may be, was influential. Because, as another
interviewee reiterates: «If you see animals being killed in front of you and then say here’s your dinner,
you’re much more likely to give it up. It’s so easy to disconnect what you buy at the supermarket
with what’s on your plate» (Interview to Paolo, Torino, 2nd September 2019).
However, not all interviewees had a direct experience with the death of an animal that generated
feelings of affliction. For one, they claimed:
«My veganism was triggered by seeing a pig-stick its head out of a tiny opening in a large pigsty.
And pigs are like dogs. I began to imagine the specific experiences of organisms. How they have the
same intelligence, the same connections to other organisms, and specific personalities. I no longer
saw how it was possible to eat them» (Interview to Matteo, Cernobbio, 12th September 2019).
A consciousness, an applied effort to understand the reality of factory farming, has been
instrumental in influencing ethical decision making. Another interviewee mentio